ABOUT THIS BOOKEngineering, Design and Construction of Portable Newtonian Telescopes is a massive 694 page book with 472 illustrations and 113 tables that tells you how to design and build a portable Newtonian telescope that performs better, weighs less, and increases your enjoyment of its use. Simultaneously accomplishing all three of these goals requires specific knowledge and abilities many telescope builders initially do not have. Not to worry. This book helps you acquire them. The author distills his years of experience into concise descriptions of engineering principles and material properties relevant to amateur telescope making. You’ll understand how structural elements behave, and be able to evaluate and select appropriate construction materials. Reducing weight and size can make any telescope easier to move, reassemble, and store. But many steps to reduce weight also can reduce structure stiffness, increasing vibration amplitude and duration. The author explains where to look for, and how to compare, weight-reduction opportunities, and how to select and implement those with little or no impact on stiffness. The book describes the design and construction of two specific telescopes. They demonstrate that even with moderately-large instruments, you can eliminate the stepstool or ladder and be seated comfortably at the eyepiece. Their lengthy chapters, profuse with images and drawings, and extensive construction detail, will lead you through the steps required to build an attractive, functioning telescope that meets exacting goals.

In many cases, engineering equations provide sufficient insight and direction to ensure the completed telescope will meet your expectations. However, real-world structures don’t always achieve anticipated performance. The author emphasizes the importance of making decisions based on data rather than on theory or accepted lore. For example, his extensive testing of three- and four-truss structures revealed some unappreciated/unknown aspects of common practices. One of the book’s major contributions is the subsequent creation of quantitative design rules for the construction of effective telescopes. The design rules are easy to use, having been incorporated into Excel worksheets that allow even the math challenged to easily determine:

Illumination profile across telescope and eyepiece fields-of-view (influenced by of a comprehensive set of variables)

Size and placement of bearing pads to achieve desired forces for altitude and azimuth movement

When buying a commercial telescope, or copying an existing design, one accepts the compromises made by the builder. When making your own, you can have features that no manufacturer could provide and remain profitable. The goals of anyone thinking of building a telescope should include optimized performance, weight, and comfort. There is no better introduction how to achieve them than this book.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
As long as he can remember, Albert Highe has been driven by the desire to understand, and then influence, how things work. This desire has led to life-long interests in science and technology. His formal training culminated in a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the California Institute of Technology in 1981. He spent his working career in companies that sold products to mostly industrial markets. As an individual contributor, he acquired knowledge of materials science, electrochemistry, and electrical and mechanical engineering, and applied his talents to the development of new materials, capabilities, and products. As he transitioned to technical management (eventually becoming director of a world-wide technical organization), he increasingly supervised the efforts of others.

It’s little wonder that Albert’s interest in science and technology drew him to the hobby of amateur astronomy. It offers many opportunities to learn about the science of the universe and the technology of fine optics. Since observing his first Messier objects in 1990 with a borrowed 4-inch reflector, he has logged observations of thousands of objects using 6- to 20-inch Newtonian reflectors. Early on, he discovered no commercial telescope met all of his needs. Creating his own was a perfect opportunity to integrate his interests, technical training, and product development experience. He probably is best known for his unique three parallel strut reflector designs that have appeared in Amateur Telescope Making Journal and Sky and Telescope, and on the websites of manufacturers who adopted them for sale